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Practical, inspirational and mouth-watering ways to prepare for general conference

Conferencegoers arrive for the Saturday afternoon session of the 188th Annual General Conference of the LDS Church at the Conference Center in Salt Lake City on March 31, 2018. Credit: Spenser Heaps, Deseret News, Deseret News
Audience members listen during the General Priesthood session of the 188th Annual General Conference of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, in the Conference Center in Salt Lake City on Saturday, March 31, 2018. Credit: Scott G Winterton, Deseret News, Deseret News
Shannon Symonds makes General Conference Cinnamon Rolls, a recipe she received from her mother, for her family as they gather for general conference. Credit: Shannon Symonds
Pondering and praying about a question has helped Credit: LDS Church
Kjirsten Youngberg stands with her husband, Eric Youngberg, in Amsterdam, where they were enjoying pancakes at The Pancake Bakery on Prinsengracht 191 in May 2018. They were on their way to visit their daughter, Rachel, and her family. Rachel is a world-c Credit: Kjirstin Youngberg, PhotoGraphia, PhotoGraphia
Eric and Kjirstin Youngberg were married in the Oakland Temple in April 1979. Credit: Kjirstin Youngberg, PhotoGraphia, PhotoGraphia
Prepare by creating a document to write your impressions and learnings.
Overflow crowds are seen above sitting by the fountain in the LDS General Conference Center listening to the first session of the LDS General Conference, Saturday, April 6, 2002. Photo/Johanna Workman (Submission date: 04/06/2002) Credit: Johanna Workman, Deseret News archives, Deseret News archives
Conferencegoers leave the Conference Center following the Saturday morning session of the LDS Church's 188th Annual General Conference in Salt Lake City on Saturday, March 31, 2018. Credit: Ravell Call, Deseret News, Deseret News
Conference goers listen to the talks during the 188th Annual General Conference of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, in the Conference Center in Salt Lake City on Sunday, April 1, 2018. Credit: Scott G Winterton, Deseret News, Deseret News
Sunday April 1, 2001 LDS General Conference--Sunday PM Photo/Keith Johnson Credit: DESERET NEWS archives, DESERET NEWS archives
The Mormon Tabernacle Choir sings during the LDS Church's 188th Annual General Conference in Salt Lake City on Saturday, March 31, 2018. Credit: Ravell Call, Deseret News, Deseret News

As general conference approaches, we asked what people do to prepare and why.

The responses range from getting ingredients to cinnamon rolls and setting up a note-taking grid to identifying questions and spiritually preparing to receive answers.

Here are a several responses. They have been edited for length and clarity.

Preparing for inspiration

As a child, general conference weekend meant I could stay in my pajamas and play in the living room all day. During my teen years, I napped through most sessions. Today, as a mother of four, general conference has become a lifeline of inspiration I need to raise my family. However, I have learned that if I want to hear the whisperings of the Spirit, I need to do my part.

Find out what watching general conference is like for members around the world.

One way I prepare is to start writing down specific questions I have or issues with which I or someone in my family is struggling. Time has taught me answers are more likely to come as I increase effort on my part. The more I center my scripture study, prayers and thoughts on the answers I’m seeking, the better prepared I am to receive inspiration. Before general conference begins, I go back and review my questions and any notes so they are fresh in my mind.

However, that’s not the only method I’ve used to prepare. Some years I haven’t been in the middle of an overwhelming trial or had burning questions. Rather, I’ve felt the need to make a change without knowing exactly what it is that needs changing. In those years, preparation takes a little more work. In addition to my normal scripture study and prayers, I review talks from previous conferences, read articles from the latest issue of the Ensign, and pray that I will hear something that Heavenly Father wants me to know.

Overall, I’ve learned that diligent preparation leads to the inspiration I need for my life at that time.

— Stacey L. Nash, Buckley, Washington

Learning grid

Something I learned from a very loving bishop to prepare for general conference has had a substantial impact on my life and my testimony. What I have titled it is a "General Conference Learning Grid." It is a pretty simple spreadsheet that I have created that includes the following items: title (of the talk), speaker, key impressions, key scriptures, key questions and promises.

Prepare by creating a document to write your impressions and learnings.
Prepare by creating a document to write your impressions and learnings.

Creating this prior to conference allows me to start to focus on what is to come. It also ensures I am not scrambling to find a place to take notes. As I listen/watch the conference talks, I fill out these different areas. Then I go back and review the talks once they are available to fill in anything I may have missed. Doing this has allowed me to get so much more out of general conference for which I am so grateful as this preparation has truly brought me blessings.

— Seth Saunders, Orem

Cinnamon roll tradition

Little did my mother know when she baked her first batch of oversized cinnamon rolls for the Sunday of general conference, she was creating a tradition that would bring family members together to worship and connect, even when they were struggling spiritually.

Shannon Symonds makes General Conference Cinnamon Rolls, a recipe she received from her mother, for her family as they gather for general conference.
Shannon Symonds makes General Conference Cinnamon Rolls, a recipe she received from her mother, for her family as they gather for general conference. | Credit: Shannon Symonds

Many years ago, my parents converted to the Church. In 1973, they moved to Utah where miraculously, you could watch general conference on television. To celebrate, my mother began a sweet and simple tradition that later helped us look forward to and prepare for conference.

On conference Sunday, mother would use her mother’s recipe to bake a large batch of frosted cinnamon rolls. We woke to a clean home and the smell of rolls. She also allowed us to break a family rule and eat in the living room around the television. It felt like Christmas morning.

Years later, my husband and I moved our large family to an old house on the Oregon coast. Far away from family, and missing home, on general conference Sunday I rose at 5 in the morning and called my mother. She gave me the magic recipe. We couldn’t afford bacon. Juice was a luxury. But I had everything in the cupboard for large, buttery cinnamon rolls. We lit a fire in the fireplace and gathered to say a prayer of thanks and enjoy our first general conference Sunday together. I had no idea how precious this tradition would become.

Today, three of my six children are active in the Church. Three are not. And yet, every general conference Sunday, all of my children will come home to eat beloved General Conference cinnamon rolls. The special combination of cinnamon rolls, tradition, conference and love brings them home. A prayer of gratitude is always said. The spirit envelops us as speakers share their messages.

Far away in Utah, 40 or 50 members of my family gather. No matter where our youth are in their spiritual journey, they enjoy General Conference cinnamon rolls. Mom’s sticky rolls have created a connection that is almost, but not quite, as sweet as the spirit that accompanies general conference Sunday.

— Shannon Symonds, Seaside, Oregon

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